I did read what you wrote and I do not agree.
We do not have to learn Hebrew to know God's Truth.
The Bible has been translated.
So you don't think it's important for us to be able to understand what's being said, and instead just believe the literal translation?
Let me challenge you on that. If someone from a foreign country moved to the USA, and wanted to learn the english language, and as they were learning it, they hear someone say "let's hit the road."
To someone who doesn't understand the idiom, "let's hit the road" sounds like "let's go punch the road with our fist," but that's not what it means. It means to start traveling. this is why it's important to understand what's being said.
[/QUOTE]I believe what is plainly written and do not try to change what God says as you are doing.[/QUOTE]
I'm not changing God's Word. I'm using similar scripture to understand it.
You shouldn't be so superficial with your understanding of God's word. Using such a superficial interpretation of the Bible is why there are so many doctrinal issues between believers. I'm not saying learn Hebrew and Greek, I'm saying understand what is being said. A superficial understanding of God's word leads to a superficial relationship with it's Author.
Israel are Jacobs blood descendants and Canaan are Esau's blood relatives...children, great grandchildren, great great grandchildren, etc.
That's what I said.
No. God knows everything that will happen is NOT a tenet for Calvinism.
Calvinists teach that God predestined everything, and that inherently means that He knows the future. It's one of the founding tenets of Calvinism, and it stems from the Greek belief of "Fate."
Ever heard of Oedipus Rex? It's one of the best examples of "fate" in all of the pagan Greek beliefs.
Calvin got many of his beliefs from Augustine, who revered Aristotle and Plato, so much so that much of what he wrote was using the pagan Greek views of the Bible.
You might have noticed that not once have I referenced Greek philosophers to interpret a passage of Scripture except to show how they did, and why their interpretation doesn't match what the Bible says, and rarely at that.
You are wrong about that. God made the plan for salvation to be through Jesus, and God MADE THAT PLAN BEFORE the creation of the world.
As far as I'm aware, I've never argued that nothing is predestined, because you can't argue that point from the Bible. I'm arguing from the standpoint that only some things are predestined, everything else is coincidence or chance. Calvinists take it further by saying everything is predestined, which it's not, and cannot be (truthfully) argued from the Bible.
So your statement that God planned out how He would save the World before creation does not contradict my stance. However, if you use that statment to say that
everything is predestined, that is wrong.
This is evidenced in Romans 9:
*For He says to Moses, “I will have mercy on whomever I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whomever I will have compassion.” - Romans 9:15
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Romans9:15&version=NKJV
And in Jeremiah 19:
*(they have also built the high places of Baal, to burn their sons with fire for burnt offerings to Baal, which I did not command or speak, nor did it come into My mind), - Jeremiah 19:5
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Jeremiah19:5&version=NKJV
I only know what I believe about that.
Perhaps you should learn more.
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